Category Archives: Insect

Leaf Cutter Ant

Leaf Cutter Ant_5

Once upon a time, there was an ant with a dream. That ant realized that the entire colony could survive if they could grow their own food. That ant realized that the food should be kept underground where it was safe from other colonies and anyone that could harm it. That ant realized that the only food that could grow underground was fungus AND that fungus required food for itself. Then, that ant convinced all of the other ants to carry pieces of leaves to feed the fungus.

We will never have a leader like that.

Cactus Longhorn Beetle (Moneilema gigas)

Cactus Longhorn Beetle (Moneilema gigas)

Genetic analyses show the Longhorn originated from an Iberian hybrid of two ancient lineages: “taurine” descending from the domestication in the Middle East, and “indicine”, descending from the domestication in India, 85% and 15% respectively by proportion. The Longhorns are direct descendants of the first in the New World. The ancestral were first brought over by Christopher Columbus in 1493 to the Caribbean island of Hispaniola. Between 1493 and 1512, Spanish colonists brought additional in subsequent expeditions. They consisted of three different breeds; Barrenda, Retinto and Grande Pieto. Over the next two centuries the Spanish moved them north, arriving in the area that would become Texas near the end of the 17th century. They escaped or were turned loose on the open range, where they remained mostly feral for the next two centuries. Over several generations, descendants evolved the high feed- and drought-stress tolerance and other “hardy” characteristics that Longhorns have become known for.

Early US settlers in Texas obtained feral ones from the borderland between the Nueces River and the Rio Grande and mixed them with their own. The result was a tough, rangy animal with long legs and long horns. Although this interbreeding was of little consequence to the makeup of a Longhorn, it did alter color. The varieties of color ranged from bluish-grey, and various yellowish hues, to browns, black, ruddy and white, both cleanly bright and dirty-speckled. Portuguese breeds, such as Alentejana and Mertolenga, are the closest relatives of Longhorns.

(Paraphrased from Wikipedia)

Giant African Millipede (Archispirostreptus gigus)

Giant African Millipede (Archispirostreptus gigus)

What goes “step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step step clonk?”

Peru 2015 – Day Moth

05_Moth_1

I have no explanation for this one, so I’ll just describe what happened.

I was shooting the fish, which were up near the surface .. presumably because there’s more oxygen there and fewer predators than below.

Then I saw this moth flying near. It dropped in amongst the fish several times. At first, I thought that it has gotten nabbed and was having a hard time flying away, but it’s repeated behavior showed that it – for some reason – wanted to be there in the middle of all of the fish. Was it laying eggs? Did it want to be eaten? Maybe it was a reporter on assignment.

There’s no way to know. Sometimes all you can do is take the shot.

Peru 2015 – Clearwing Butterfly

06_Clearwing_1

This is the second clear- or glasswing butterfly that I’ve seen. Fundamentally, they’re not that interesting. They’re just butterflies that lack the scales on their wings that other butterflies have, so you can see through the wings just like you can with most insects.

However, seeing them in person is illogically fascinating because you don’t think of butterflies as regular insects, so when you see something that forces your mind to re-categorize them, it can be a little jarring.

Peru 2015 – Bullet Ant

06_Bullet Ant_2

These ants are about an inch long and have the worst bite in the world. They say that it feels like being hit by a bullet and that there’s nothing you can do to stop the pain for up to an hour.

This implies that there are enough people in Peru that have both been shot and bit by this ant, to provide evidence for this story.

Sounds like an unlucky place to live, actually.

Peru 2015 – Cicada

06_Cicada_5

For as long as I remember, I wanted to see a cicada coming out of its shell. A few years ago, I was lucky enough to watch one climbing a tree, but had to leave before I could get any shots. On the one night hike in Peru, at the very end, my brother point this little guy out. I had about two minutes to get the light set up correctly, using minimal equipment, while there was significant pressure to end the hike and get back in the boats. On one hand, I think I got a great shot giving the conditions. On the other, it was one more example of why large groups and I don’t really work out very well.